| Mawson, C.O.S., ed. (18701938). Rogets International Thesaurus. 1922. |
| |
| Class VI. Words Relating to the Sentient and Moral Powers | | Section II. Personal Affections | | 5. Extrinsic Affections |
| |
| 885. [Undue Assumption of Superiority.] Insolence. |
| |
| | |
| NOUN: | INSOLENCE, brashness, brazenness, malapertness; haughtiness &c. adj.; arrogance, airs; bumptiousness, toploftiness [colloq.], assumption, presumption; assumption of infallibility; contumely, disdain, insult; overbearance, domineering &c. v.; bluster, swagger, swaggering &c. v.; bounce; terrorism; tyranny [See Severity]; beggar on horseback; usurpation.
impertinence, cheek [colloq. or slang], nerve [slang], nerviness [slang], sauce [colloq.], abuse; sauciness &c. adj.; flippancy, dicacity [obs.], petulance [rare in this sense], procacity [rare].
impudence, self-assertion, assurance, audacity, hardihood; front, face, brass, gall [slang]; shamelessness &c. adj.; effrontery, hardened front, face of brass.
JINGOISM, chauvinism; Kultur [Ger.], might is right, Macht ist Recht [Ger.].
MALAPERT, saucebox (blusterer) [See Blusterer].
JINGO, jingoist, chauvinist; fire eater [colloq.]; boaster [See Boasting].
|
| | |
| VERB: | BE INSOLENT &c. adj.; bluster, vapor, swagger, swell, give oneself airs, snap ones fingers, kick up a dust [colloq.]; swear (affirm) [See Affirmation]; rap out oaths; roister.
arrogate, assume, presume; make bold, make free; take a liberty, give an inch and take an ell.
outface, outlook, outstare, outbrazen, outbrave; stare out of countenance; brazen out; lay down the law; teach ones grandmother to suck eggs [colloq.]; assume a lofty bearing; talk big, look big, put on big looks, act the grand seigneur; mount -, ride- the high horse; toss the head, carry with a high hand; tempt Providence; want snuffing [colloq.].
DOMINEER, bully, dictate, hector; lord it over; traiter -, regarder- de haut en bas [F.]; exact; snub, huff, beard, fly in the face of; put to the blush; bear -, beat- down; browbeat, intimidate; trample -, tread- -down, - under foot; dragoon, ride roughshod over; bulldoze [colloq., U. S.], terrorize.
|
| | |
| ADJECTIVE: | INSOLENT, haughty, arrogant, imperious, magisterial, dictatorial, arbitrary; high-handed, high and mighty; contumelious, supercilious, overbearing, toplofty [colloq.], toploftical [rare], in- tolerant, domineering, overweening, high-flown; precocious, assuming, would-be, bumptious.
pert, flippant, fresh [slang, U. S.], brash, cavalier, saucy, forward, impertinent, malapert; impudent, audacious, presumptuous.
BRAZEN, bluff, shameless, aweless, unblushing, unabashed; bold-faced, bare-faced, brazen-faced; dead -, lost- to shame.
BLUSTERING, swaggering, hectoring, rollicking, roistering, vaporing, free and easy, devil-may-care, jaunty or janty; thrasonic [rare], thrasonical, fire-eating [colloq.]; full of sound and fury [Macbeth].
JINGO, jingoistic, chauvinistic.
|
| | |
| ADVERB: | INSOLENTLY &c. adj.; with nose in air; with arms akimbo; de haut en bas [F.]; with a high hand; ex cathedra [L.].
|
| | |
| QUOTATIONS: | - Ones bark being worse than his bite.
- Beggars mounted run their horse to death.III Henry VI
- Quid times? Cæsarem vehis.Plutarch
|
|
|